Follows Tom O'Day, who is loved by two women: Anna Burger and Gloria Hamilton. He has no idea of Anna's love for him, and he becomes engaged to Gloria.Follows Tom O'Day, who is loved by two women: Anna Burger and Gloria Hamilton. He has no idea of Anna's love for him, and he becomes engaged to Gloria.Follows Tom O'Day, who is loved by two women: Anna Burger and Gloria Hamilton. He has no idea of Anna's love for him, and he becomes engaged to Gloria.
Elmo Billings
- Young Boy
- (uncredited)
Gary Cooper
- Flood Survivor
- (uncredited)
Kay Deslys
- Dance Hall Queen
- (uncredited)
Clark Gable
- Townsman Standing at Bar in Saloon
- (uncredited)
Florence Lawrence
- Townswoman
- (uncredited)
Carole Lombard
- One of Gloria's Four Friends
- (uncredited)
- …
Babe London
- Saloon Dance Hall Performer
- (uncredited)
George Reed
- Dinty - Camp Cook
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaCarole Lombard (uncredited) plays one of Gloria's four friends, who are all in three key scenes: one in which they are eavesdropping while Tom proposes marriage, another while Gloria is getting dressed for her wedding, and finally as bridesmaids at the wedding. Lombard is standing directly between and behind Tom and Gloria. Clark Gable (also uncredited) can be recognized as one of a group of men standing in front of a bar in a briefly glimpsed medium shot. (Gable and Lombard did not actually meet until several years later when they starred opposite each other in No Man of Her Own (1932).) Gary Cooper also appears in a small part - actually two small parts, as both a flood victim and a survivor.
- GoofsThe film has railroad tracks crossing right in front of the dam. The dam fails just as the train carrying the villain (in the form of the timber company owner and architect of this disastrous flood) crosses in front of it. Evidently, this was the director's effort to have the villain punished for his wicked deed of putting profit over lives. BUT there was no railroad crossing in front of the dam. And as there was no timber concern there was no evil company owner/villain to punish. YET there was a railroad running much of the valley through which the flood traveled to Johnstown. And this is where one of the greatest heroes of the disaster achieved notoriety. An engineer, John Hess, heard the rumbling of the approaching flood, threw his engine into reverse and raced backwards down the valley, ahead of the flood, blowing his whistle to warn people of the approaching disaster (this warning saved many people who were able to reach high ground and safety). Eventually, the flood waters caught up to the train and knocked off the tracks (and added it to the debris field at the head of the flood). Fortunately, this true hero did survive this ordeal. So, no train tracks in front of the dam, and no villain to punish. BUT a railroad down the valley in front of the flood, and a genuine hero to boot. One must ask why the director felt it necessary to choose a completely fictitious story with a villain, when he could have chosen a TRUE story of heroism.
- Quotes
John Hamilton, Lumber Camp Boss: Repaired that dam yet?
- Alternate versionsPROLOGUE TO 2023 RESTORED PRINT: "The restoration of The Johnstown Flood, a William Fox produced--Irving Cummings directed motion picture --- was made was only made possible because The George Eastman Museum had the foresight to both preserve the unique original 35mm nitrate print and then create preservation elements. The first five reels of the original tinted nitrate have been scanned by GEM in 4k, along with the final real of there 35 mm preservation duplicate negative. For the restoration, those data files have been digitally cleaned and repaired, short main and end titles with missing footage have been brought to the original length, with fades receiving attention as well. One missing inter-title has been re-established based upon the original screenplay, and minor nitrate deposition has been repaired. In a couple of instances where the decomp was severe, we made the decision to allow it to remain as it was for its educational benefit toward film preservation, restoration, and the need to support organizations like GEM. The Johnstown Flood was produced in 1926. it is a product of its time that tells a story that took place in 1889 --- twenty-four years after the end of the Civil War. The film may depict some racial and ethnic prejudices that were the unfortunate norm in America at that time. they were short-sighted and painful then, and can still be upsetting today. Those behind the preservation and restoration of this film are presenting the work as originally created." "To do otherwise would be akin to suggesting that these prejudices never existed."
- ConnectionsEdited into Flaming Frontiers (1938)
Featured review
I found out about this movie from Corridor crew, discussing it's VFX, and i was hooked. But i didn't expect the movie to be that good. I havent been impressed by a movie (old or new) probably since i saw Wings a year ago.
The saddest part is - it's real tragedy Maybe thats why they put so much efford in making the movie. It felt like passion movie instead of money-grab as so many.
The VFX are definitely one of the best ive seen in pre40s movie. Made with a lot of passion to get them right. Most of the VFX shots look amazing even in 2024 on 4K screen, only few are " not so good" .
Cinematography is good, and even impressive near the end when the pacing fastens so much.
Acting to my pleasant surprise was great. Usually old movies are kinda lacking in acting, as it's product of their time but rarely believable. Yet here... Quite good drama acting, without too much of that typical for the time jiggery energetic limb moving. Facial acting was solid, esp the father's one.
Music.. oh man, whoever made the music deserved the payment.
The remaster they made in 2023 (which i watched) is great. Makes you wish they do more movies like that.
Overall, highly recommended movie.
The saddest part is - it's real tragedy Maybe thats why they put so much efford in making the movie. It felt like passion movie instead of money-grab as so many.
The VFX are definitely one of the best ive seen in pre40s movie. Made with a lot of passion to get them right. Most of the VFX shots look amazing even in 2024 on 4K screen, only few are " not so good" .
Cinematography is good, and even impressive near the end when the pacing fastens so much.
Acting to my pleasant surprise was great. Usually old movies are kinda lacking in acting, as it's product of their time but rarely believable. Yet here... Quite good drama acting, without too much of that typical for the time jiggery energetic limb moving. Facial acting was solid, esp the father's one.
Music.. oh man, whoever made the music deserved the payment.
The remaster they made in 2023 (which i watched) is great. Makes you wish they do more movies like that.
Overall, highly recommended movie.
- How long is The Johnstown Flood?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime1 hour 6 minutes
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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